Mar 29, 2024  
Catalogue 2022-2023 
    
Catalogue 2022-2023 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

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ANTH 250 - Language, Culture, and Society

Semester Offered: Fall
1 unit(s)


This course draws on a wide range of theoretical perspectives in exploring a particular problem, emphasizing the contribution of linguistics and linguistic anthropology to issues that bear on research in a number of disciplines. At issue in each selected course topic are the complex ways in which cultures, societies, and individuals are interrelated in the act of using language within and across particular speech communities.

May be repeated for credit if the topic has changed.

Topic for 2022/23a:The Poetics and Politics of Everyday Conversation.  Language is an ever-present part of everyday life, but careful attention to language tends to be restricted to eventful occasions. Meanwhile, the significance of language use in everyday life—conversations over a weekday dinner with family, or casual banter with friends while walking from one classroom to the next—is often overlooked. This course focuses on conversations in everyday life in order to reveal the social dynamics that unfold during seemingly uneventful interactions. In fact, these social interactions are all the more consequential because they are taken for granted. Focusing on the forms of talk that accompany caretaking, socializing, and play, this course provides insights into how cultural and social practices are acquired, and into the everyday practices wherein social status, power, group boundaries, and identities are challenged and established. Topics may include: the stylistic features of everyday conversations; cultural differences in conversational style; manifestations of racism, sexism, homophobia, transphobia, and classism in everyday talk; the performance of politeness and informality; code-switching and bilingual conversation; stance, framing, narrative, and affect in conversation. Students learn how to analyze everyday conversations using theories and methods from conversation analysis, narrative analysis, and ethnomethodology. Louis Römer.

Two 75-minute periods.

Course Format: CLS



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